Building a Shoulder from Scratch
That dull ache was the beginning of a fifteen-year saga for Leonard Preston. Then a 23-year-old Air Force member, Leonard was diagnosed with chondrosarcoma, a form of bone cancer that starts out in the cartilage. By the time they caught it, Leonard’s cancer had eaten through more than half of his humerus.
While Leonard’s diagnosis meant he could no longer actively serve, he was transferred into the VA system to receive the first of what would be many surgeries. The damaged part of his shoulder was removed and rebuilt with bone from his leg and hip. While the surgery was successful, a minor car accident three years later broke his rebuilt shoulder. Several more rounds of surgeries and hardware options failed to knit into his system.
Through VA’s Care in Community Program, Leonard was referred to Dr. Srinath Kamineni, a shoulder and elbow specialist at UK HealthCare’s Orthopaedic Surgery & Sports Medicine. Faced with Leonard’s extensive history and complex case, Dr. Kamineni was able to consult with international colleagues to develop a new approach to rebuilding Leonard’s shoulder. “This is how you put a global network to work," Dr. Kamineni said.
Dr. Kamineni and his team ended up performing two shoulder replacements on Leonard, then stabilizing the structure of his shoulder with a tissue graft that functioned like a set of suspenders for the replacement shoulder. It’s a complex, innovative approach that will take time and careful rehabilitation to heal. Leonard is up to the task.
“The biggest factor in all of this is Leonard’s personality,” said Dr. Kamineni. “He's a very positive patient and he's a very compliant patient. And those two features alone give you hope that something will work with him. It's very underrated, the attitude of a patient towards success, but I think it's actually one of the biggest features, even with tough pathologies.”
Leonard’s personality is unwaveringly positive, even with everything he’s been through. VA sent him to college, then graduate school, leading him to his current role as an Occupational Safety and Health Specialist at VA. It’s a job and a life he loves, despite being very different from life before his diagnosis.